The
Great Shepherd
by Lois Tverberg

I
am the good shepherd, and I know my own and my own know me, even as
the Father knows me and I know the Father; and I lay down my life for
the sheep. John
10:14
Jesus
says "I am the good shepherd" in John's gospel, and we may not realize that the image of the "shepherd" as the Messiah
is all over the Old Testament, in Micah, Isaiah, Jeremiah, and Zechariah
and other books. In the next few devotionals we will look at what these
Messianic prophecies said about Jesus.
What is a "good
shepherd"?
In
his classic book, A Shepherd Looks at Psalm 23,1 Phillip
Keller describes the difference between the good and
bad shepherd, and the lesson he learned:
In memory I can still see one
of the sheep ranches in our district which was operated by a tenant
sheepman. He ought never to have been allowed to keep sheep. He gave
little or no time to his flock. Every year these poor creatures were
forced to gnaw away at bare brown fields and impoverished pastures.
Shelter to safeguard and protect the suffering sheep from storms and
blizzards was scanty and inadequate. In their thin, weak and diseased
condition these poor sheep were a pathetic sight. To all their distress,
the heartless, selfish owner seemed utterly callous and indifferent.
I never looked at those sheep
without an acute awareness that this was a precise picture of those
wretched old taskmasters, Sin and Satan, on their derelict ranch —
scoffing at the plight of those within their power. It is a picture
of the pathetic people of the world over who have not known what it
is to belong to the Good Shepherd, who suffer instead under sin and
Satan. How amazing it is that individual men and women vehemently refuse
and reject the claims of Christ on their lives.
He came to set men free of their
own sins, their own selves, their own fears. Those so liberated loved
Him with fierce loyalty.
It is this One who insists that
He was the Good Shepherd, the understanding Shepherd, the concerned
Shepherd who cares enough to seek out and save and restore lost men
and women.
1Phillip Keller, A Shepherd
Looks at Psalm 23, 1996, Zondervan, ISBN 0-310-21435-1. The passages
above are from Chapter 1, "The Lord is My Shepherd."